7,352 research outputs found
An investigation of MAGSAT and complementary data emphasizing precambrian shields and adjacent areas of West Africa and South America
Accomplishments with regard to the mapping and analysis of MAGSAT data for the investigation of correlations between the magnetic field characteristics of South American and African shields are reported. Significant results in the interpretation of the global total-field anomalies and the anomaly patterns of Africa and South America are discussed. The central position of the Brazilian shield tends to form a negative total-field anomaly, consistent with findings for shields in equatorial Africa. Sedimentary sequences in the Amazon basin and in the Rio de Janeiro-Sao Paolo areas exhibit positive anomalies, also consistent with equatorial Africa. Results for the Caribbean Sea and Guyana regions are also described
Do MAGSAT anomalies contain a record of past and present-day mantle convection under South America?
Global anomaly maps from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Magnetic Field Satellite (MAGSAT) have been spatially filtered to reduce the prominence of long-wavelength east-west bands and to improve the discrimination of anomalies within structural provinces. Previous research suggested a correlation between total-field MAGSAT anomaly lows in equatorial regions with crustal bodies of relatively high average magnetic susceptibility (such as Archaean shields), and of anomaly highs with bodies of low susceptibility (such as deep parts of basins). These correlations reverse at higher latitudes
An investigation of MAGSAT and complementary data emphasizing Precambrian shields and adjacent areas of West Africa and South America
A mineral deposits overlay was prepared to the van der Grinten projection geological world map and coloring of the map was initiated. The Mercator projection version was proofread and some preliminary modeling of MAGSAT anomalies for South America were undertaken
On the interpretation of satellite-derived gravity and magnetic data for studies of crustal geology and metallogenesis
Satellite-derived global gravity and magnetic maps have been shown to be useful in large-scale studies of the Earth's crust, despite the relative infancy of such studies. Numerous authors have made spatial associations of gravity or magnetic anomalies with geological provinces. Gravimetric interpretations are often made in terms of isostasy, regional variations of density, or of geodesy in general. Interpretations of satellite magnetic anomalies often base assumptions of overall crustal magnetism on concepts of the vertical and horizontal distribution of magnetic susceptibility, then make models of these assumed distributions. The opportunity of improving our satellite gravity and magnetic data through the proposed Geopotential Research Mission should considerably improve the scientific community's ability to analyze and interpret global magnetic and gravity data
An investigation of MAGSAT and complementary data emphasizing precambrian shields and adjacent areas of West Africa and South America
The problems associated with the use of an interactive magnetic modeling program are reported and a publication summarizing the MAGSAT anomaly results for Africa and the possible tectonic associations of these anomalies is provided. An overview of the MAGSAT scalar anomaly map for Africa suggested a correlation of MAGSAT anomalies with major crustal blocks of uplift or depression and different degrees of regional metamorphism. The strongest MAGSAT anomalies in Africa are closely correlated spatially with major tectonic features. Results indicate that the Bangui anomaly may be caused by a central old Precambrian shield, flanked to the north and south by two relatively young sedimentary basins
Plasma issues associated with the use of electrodynamic tethers
The use of an electrodynamic tether to generate power or thrust on the space station raises important plasma issues associted with the current flow. In addition to the issue of current closure through the space station, high power tethers (equal to or greater than tens of kilowatts) require the use of plasma contactors to enhance the current flow. They will generate large amounts of electrostatic turbulence in the vicinity of the space station. This is because the contactors work best when a large amount of current driven turbulence is excited. Current work is reviewed and future directions suggested
Sufficient Conditions for Topological Order in Insulators
We prove the existence of low energy excitations in insulating systems at
general filling factor under certain conditions, and discuss in which cases
these may be identified as topological excitations. This proof is based on
previously proven locality results. In the case of half-filling it provides a
significantly shortened proof of the recent higher dimensional
Lieb-Schultz-Mattis theorem.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
Magic State Distillation with Low Space Overhead and Optimal Asymptotic Input Count
We present an infinite family of protocols to distill magic states for
-gates that has a low space overhead and uses an asymptotic number of input
magic states to achieve a given target error that is conjectured to be optimal.
The space overhead, defined as the ratio between the physical qubits to the
number of output magic states, is asymptotically constant, while both the
number of input magic states used per output state and the -gate depth of
the circuit scale linearly in the logarithm of the target error (up to
). Unlike other distillation protocols, this protocol
achieves this performance without concatenation and the input magic states are
injected at various steps in the circuit rather than all at the start of the
circuit. The protocol can be modified to distill magic states for other gates
at the third level of the Clifford hierarchy, with the same asymptotic
performance. The protocol relies on the construction of weakly self-dual CSS
codes with many logical qubits and large distance, allowing us to implement
control-SWAPs on multiple qubits. We call this code the "inner code". The
control-SWAPs are then used to measure properties of the magic state and detect
errors, using another code that we call the "outer code". Alternatively, we use
weakly-self dual CSS codes which implement controlled Hadamards for the inner
code, reducing circuit depth. We present several specific small examples of
this protocol.Comment: 39 pages, (v2) renamed "odd" and "even" weakly self-dual CSS codes of
(v1) to "normal" and "hyperbolic" codes, respectively. (v3) published in
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